Hello I’m Robert Johnson and this is what we were working on in class.

library(Zelig)
## Loading required package: boot
## Loading required package: MASS
## Loading required package: sandwich
## ZELIG (Versions 4.2-1, built: 2013-09-12)
## 
## +----------------------------------------------------------------+
## |  Please refer to http://gking.harvard.edu/zelig for full       |
## |  documentation or help.zelig() for help with commands and      |
## |  models support by Zelig.                                      |
## |                                                                |
## |  Zelig project citations:                                      |
## |    Kosuke Imai, Gary King, and Olivia Lau.  (2009).            |
## |    ``Zelig: Everyone's Statistical Software,''                 |
## |    http://gking.harvard.edu/zelig                              |
## |   and                                                          |
## |    Kosuke Imai, Gary King, and Olivia Lau. (2008).             |
## |    ``Toward A Common Framework for Statistical Analysis        |
## |    and Development,'' Journal of Computational and             |
## |    Graphical Statistics, Vol. 17, No. 4 (December)             |
## |    pp. 892-913.                                                |
## |                                                                |
## |   To cite individual Zelig models, please use the citation     |
## |   format printed with each model run and in the documentation. |
## +----------------------------------------------------------------+
## 
## 
## 
## Attaching package: 'Zelig'
## 
## The following object is masked from 'package:utils':
## 
##     cite
library(DescTools)
## 
## Attaching package: 'DescTools'
## 
## The following object is masked from 'package:Zelig':
## 
##     Mode
data(turnout)
str(turnout)
## 'data.frame':    2000 obs. of  5 variables:
##  $ race   : Factor w/ 2 levels "others","white": 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ...
##  $ age    : int  60 51 24 38 25 67 40 56 32 75 ...
##  $ educate: num  14 10 12 8 12 12 12 10 12 16 ...
##  $ income : num  3.35 1.86 0.63 3.42 2.79 ...
##  $ vote   : int  1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 ...
hist(turnout$educate)

hist(turnout$income)

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